Slab Contrasted Noby 9 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, signage, logotypes, western, vintage, robust, playful, poster-like, heritage tone, display impact, sign painter feel, friendly weight, bracketed slabs, ink-trap feel, ball terminals, soft joins, rounded corners.
A sturdy slab-serif with heavy, rectangular serifs and visibly bracketed joins that soften the transitions into the stems. Strokes show clear modulation, with thick verticals paired with thinner connecting strokes, giving the letters a slightly engraved, old-style rhythm despite the bold mass. Counters are generous and rounded (notably in O, Q, and the bowls of B/P/R), and many forms lean on softened corners and small ball-like terminals in places, which keeps the texture friendly rather than rigid. Numerals are wide and weighty with strong baseline presence, designed to read as display figures rather than delicate text lining.
It performs best in headlines and short-to-medium text where its strong slabs and contrast can provide character without relying on fine detail. It suits posters, labels, menus, and signage that benefit from a bold vintage presence, and it can also anchor wordmarks that want an assertive, heritage-leaning tone.
The overall tone feels vintage and workmanlike, with a hint of Western or circus-posters—confident, attention-grabbing, and slightly whimsical. The bracketed slabs and rounded shaping give it an approachable, nostalgic voice that suggests handbills, packaging, or heritage signage rather than a clinical modern look.
The design appears intended to blend bold slab-serif authority with a nostalgic, print-era warmth, using bracketed serifs, rounded shaping, and stroke modulation to create a distinctive display voice that remains readable at larger sizes.
The typeface maintains a consistent, blocky serif language across caps and lowercase, producing a dark, even color in paragraphs while still showing lively variation from the stroke contrast and rounded interior shapes. The lowercase includes distinctive, chunky forms (such as the single-storey a and the compact, heavy-shouldered n/m) that reinforce its display-oriented personality.